Jacob Bernoulli

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Jacob Bernoulli
Image:Jakob Bernoulli.jpg
Jacob Bernoulli
BornDecember 27 1654(1654-12-27)
Basel, Switzerland
DiedAugust 16 1705 (aged 50)
Basel, Switzerland
ResidenceImage:Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland
NationalityImage:Flag of Switzerland.svg Swiss
FieldMathematician
InstitutionsUniversity of Basel
Alma materUniversity of Basel
Academic advisor  Gottfried Leibniz
Notable students  Johann Bernoulli
Jacob Hermann
Nicolaus I Bernoulli
Known forBernoulli trial
Bernoulli numbers
Religious stanceCalvinist
Brother of Johann Bernoulli.
For other family members named Jacob, see Bernoulli family.

Jacob Bernoulli (also known as James or Jacques) (Basel, December 27, 1654August 16, 1705) was one of the eight prominent mathematicians in the Bernoulli family.

Following his father's wish, Jacob studied theology and entered the ministry. But contrary to the desires of his parents, he also studied mathematics and astronomy. He traveled throughout Europe from 1676 to 1682, learning about the latest discoveries in mathematics and the sciences. This included the work of Robert Boyle and Robert Hooke.

He became familiar with calculus through a correspondence with Gottfried Leibniz, then collaborated with his brother Johann on various applications, notably publishing papers on transcendental curves (1696) and isoperimetry (1700, 1701). In 1690, Jacob became the first person to develop the technique for solving separable differential equations.

Upon returning to Basel in 1682, he founded a school for mathematics and the sciences. He was appointed professor of mathematics at the University of Basel in 1687, remaining in this position for the rest of his life.

Jacob is best known for the work Ars Conjectandi (The Art of Conjecture), published eight years after his death in 1713 by his nephew Nicholas. In this work, he described the known results in probability theory and in enumeration, often providing alternative proofs of known results. This work also includes the application of probability theory to games of chance and his introduction of the theorem known as the law of large numbers. The terms Bernoulli trial and Bernoulli numbers result from this work. The Bernoulli crater, on the Moon, is also named after him jointly with his brother Johann.

Bernoulli chose a figure of a logarithmic spiral and the motto Eadem mutata resurgo ("Changed and yet the same, I rise again") for his gravestone; the spiral executed by the stonemasons was, however, an Archimedean spiral. [1]

[edit] Further reading

Hoffman, J.E. (1970-80). "Bernoulli, Jakob (Jacques) I". Dictionary of Scientific Biography 2. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 46-51. ISBN 0684101149. 

[edit] External links


Persondata
NAME Bernoulli, Jacob
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Mathematician
DATE OF BIRTH December 27, 1654
PLACE OF BIRTH Basel, Switzerland
DATE OF DEATH August 16, 1705
PLACE OF DEATH Basel, Switzerland
ast:Jakob Bernoulli

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